[Bug 1788486] Re: apt behaviour with strict dependencies
Eric Desrochers
eric.desrochers at canonical.com
Thu Aug 23 00:28:45 UTC 2018
Another package scenario, using "zsh" this time:
$ apt-get install zsh=5.1.1-1ubuntu2
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Some packages could not be installed. This may mean that you have
requested an impossible situation or if you are using the unstable
distribution that some required packages have not yet been created
or been moved out of Incoming.
The following information may help to resolve the situation:
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
zsh : Depends: zsh-common (= 5.1.1-1ubuntu2) but 5.1.1-1ubuntu2.2 is to be installed
E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.
I'm currently compiling the 'apt' upstream source code to test using the latest and greatest 'apt' version and see by any chance if that behaviour is still present using latest version.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1788486
Title:
apt behaviour with strict dependencies
Status in apt package in Ubuntu:
Confirmed
Status in apt source package in Xenial:
Confirmed
Status in apt source package in Bionic:
Confirmed
Bug description:
[Impact]
We notice that situation while investigating a security update using
Landscape, but it also applies to 'apt' outside the Landscape context.
'apt' should be smarter to detect/install packages with strict
dependencies such as systemd[1] when a version is specified for
upgrade (Ex: $ apt-get install systemd=229-4ubuntu-21.1).
It should automatically install the dependencies (if any) from that
same version as well instead of failing trying to install the highest
version available (if any) while installing the specified version for
the one mentionned :
========================
$ apt-get install systemd=229-4ubuntu-21.1
....
"systemd : Depends: libsystemd0 (= 229-4ubuntu21.1) but 229-4ubuntu21.4 is to be installed"
=========================
To face that problem :
- Package with lower version should be found in -security ( Ex: systemd/229-4ubuntu21.1 )
- Package with higher version should be found in -updates ( Ex: systemd/229-4ubuntu21.4 )
- Package should have strict dependencies ( Ex: libsystemd0 (= ${binary:Version}) )
- The upgrade should only specify version for the package, without it's dependencies. (Ex: $ apt-get install systemd=229-4ubuntu-21.1" #systemd without libsystemd0 depends)
Using systemd is a good reproducer, I'm sure finding other package
with the same situation is easy.
It has been easily reproduced with systemd on Xenial and Bionic so
far.
[1] debian/control
Depends: ${shlibs:Depends},
${misc:Depends},
libsystemd0 (= ${binary:Version}),
...
[Workaround]
If package + dependencies are specified, the upgrade work just fine :
Ex: $ apt-get install systemd=229-4ubuntu-21.1
libsystemd0=229-4ubuntu-21.1
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